Hypotheses: Additives are commonly used to tune macromolecular conformational transitions. Among additives, trehalose is an excellent bioprotectant and among responsive polymers, PNIPAM is the most studied material. Nevertheless, their interaction mechanism so far has only been hinted without direct investigation, and, crucially, never elucidated in comparison to proteins. Detailed insights would help understand to what extent PNIPAM microgels can effectively be used as synthetic biomimetic materials, to reproduce and study, at the colloidal scale, isolated protein behavior and its sensitivity to interactions with specific cosolvents or cosolutes. Experiments: The effect of trehalose on the swelling behavior of PNIPAM microgels was monitored by dynamic light scattering; Raman spectroscopy and molecular dynamics simulations were used to explore changes of solvation and dynamics across the swelling-deswelling transition at the molecular scale. Findings: Strongly hydrated trehalose molecules develop water-mediated interactions with PNIPAM microgels, thereby preserving polymer hydration below and above the transition while drastically inhibiting local motions of the polymer and of its hydration shell. Our study, for the first time, demonstrates that slowdown of dynamics and preferential exclusion are the principal mechanisms governing trehalose effect on PNIPAM microgels, at odds with preferential adsorption of alcohols, but in full analogy with the behavior observed in trehalose-protein systems.

Thermoresponsivity of poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) microgels in water-trehalose solution and its relation to protein behavior

Tavagnacco L;Comez L;Buratti E;Bertoldo M;Zaccarelli E;
2021

Abstract

Hypotheses: Additives are commonly used to tune macromolecular conformational transitions. Among additives, trehalose is an excellent bioprotectant and among responsive polymers, PNIPAM is the most studied material. Nevertheless, their interaction mechanism so far has only been hinted without direct investigation, and, crucially, never elucidated in comparison to proteins. Detailed insights would help understand to what extent PNIPAM microgels can effectively be used as synthetic biomimetic materials, to reproduce and study, at the colloidal scale, isolated protein behavior and its sensitivity to interactions with specific cosolvents or cosolutes. Experiments: The effect of trehalose on the swelling behavior of PNIPAM microgels was monitored by dynamic light scattering; Raman spectroscopy and molecular dynamics simulations were used to explore changes of solvation and dynamics across the swelling-deswelling transition at the molecular scale. Findings: Strongly hydrated trehalose molecules develop water-mediated interactions with PNIPAM microgels, thereby preserving polymer hydration below and above the transition while drastically inhibiting local motions of the polymer and of its hydration shell. Our study, for the first time, demonstrates that slowdown of dynamics and preferential exclusion are the principal mechanisms governing trehalose effect on PNIPAM microgels, at odds with preferential adsorption of alcohols, but in full analogy with the behavior observed in trehalose-protein systems.
2021
Istituto per la Sintesi Organica e la Fotoreattivita' - ISOF
Istituto dei Sistemi Complessi - ISC
Istituto Officina dei Materiali - IOM -
Inglese
604
705
718
14
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0021979721010675
Biomimetic material; Bioprotection; Cosolvents and cosolutes; Hydration water; Lower critical solution temperature (LCST); Microgels; Poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (PNIPAM); Trehalose; Volume phase transition
Università di Perugia (''CarESS" project, D.R. n. 597); the European Research Council - ERC (ERC-CoG-2015, Grant No.681597 MIMIC); Ministero dell'Istruzione, dell'Università e della Ricerca - MIUR (FARE project R16XLE2X3L, SOFTART). CINECA-ISCRA grants (Nos. HP10C1IX5O and HP10C9V0IP)
11
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
262
Rosi, Bp; Tavagnacco, L; Comez, L; Sassi, P; Ricci, M; Buratti, E; Bertoldo, M; Petrillo, C; Zaccarelli, E; Chiessi, E; Corezzi, S
01 Contributo su Rivista::01.01 Articolo in rivista
partially_open
   Modeling microgels: from microscopic design to macroscopic description
   MIMIC
   European Commission
   Horizon 2020 Framework Programme
   681597
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/399329
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